The Good Rat: A True Story
3.5/5
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About this ebook
In his inimitable New York voice, Pulitzer Prize winner Jimmy Breslin gives us a look through the keyhole at the people and places that define the Mafia—characters like John Gotti, Sammy "the Bull" Gravano, Anthony "Gaspipe" Casso (named for his weapon of choice), and Jimmy "the Clam" Eppolito—interwoven with the remarkable true-crime saga of the good rat himself, Burt Kaplan of Bensonhurst, Brooklyn, the star witness in the recent trial of two NYPD detectives indicted for carrying out eight gangland executions. Through these unforgettable real-life and long-forgotten Mafia stories, Jimmy Breslin captures the moments in which the mob was made and broken.
Jimmy Breslin
Jimmy Breslin was awarded the Pulitzer Prize for Distinguished Commentary in 1986. Through the last four decades, his columns have appeared in various New York City newspapers and have been syndicated nationwide. He is the author of Damon Runyon: A Biography and several bestselling novels, among them The Gang That Couldn't Shoot Straight. He lives in New York City.
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Reviews for The Good Rat
41 ratings3 reviews
- Rating: 5 out of 5 stars5/5The Good Rat, by Jimmy Breslin. A writer of some excellent fiction, Breslin now gives truth to "stranger than fiction" and does it with the same panache he displays so well in his fiction. Good guys and bad guys alike stand revealed in all their naked true selves. I wonder he is still alive considering the characters he investigated/wrote about, and no punches pulled. The tension is there as the deadly deeds are revealed by the perpetrators. Every revelation puts the witness in danger, but the revelations go on. The story revolves around an imprisoned man who operated inside and outside the law, but he testifies honestly with, seemingly no reprisals. You got'ta wonder. A quick read, very entertaining. A great look at the decline (?) of organized crime.
- Rating: 3 out of 5 stars3/5I guess I get Jimmy Breslin. It's the diction, the cadence and the shaggy wandering narrative style. But he's so parochial. Aside from someone who is really into Mafia history or who lived in New York during these trials, I doubt many people could stick with this all the way through. Too many characters, too much rambling. Too much reliance on court transcripts without context.Couldn't help thinking that Mike Royko would have a better feel for a readership beyond his city. Funny thing: this is a story about the end of the Italian mafia, the last of the wise guys, the demise of which was being err celebrated or immortalized with the Sopranos even as Breslin was writing. As he notes, even movies like Godfather were marking the end of an era.Yet Breslin doesn't pick up on the popular interest to make some compares and contrasts. How do some of the real characters and organizations resemble the fictional ones? You sure don't root for any of these low-lifes that Breslin briefly sketches. There's one oblique remark about Pacino backing out of the making of The Gang That Couldn't Shoot Straight at the same time that Breslin met the young De Niro but that about covers it.Breslin seems to think that the mafia--organized crime--equals the Italian mafia. But the Chinese mafia has probably been bigger for a long time in the US--in the sense of the number of people being trafficked and the money and drugs flowing through. Gambling, loansharking. As far as global links too. Murder? I don't know. Then of course there must be a lot of Latin American gangs as well.In short: very New York.
- Rating: 5 out of 5 stars5/5A surprisingly entertaining book considering the topic. Jimmy Breslin has built a story of the Mafia old and current around the court case against two extremely “dirty” cops in the NYPD. Burt Kaplan, working for the Mafia for decades, is the witness; now in his 70s and tired of prison life, he has turned “rat”. Kaplan is, from the book cover in this version “one of the most devastating turncoats of all time”. The court transcripts have a certain fascination which give great insight into the minds of the Mafia. Everything is run like a business, as is fairly well-known, but to hear it in the words of Kaplan, the descriptions of murder, making people disappear, comes across as just a day in the office. He tells everything straight as if describing ordering a meal to be delivered, or shipping a parcel out. Kaplan’s “voice” and Breslin’s style are what make the story so entertaining.Breslin fills in background between sessions of the transcript with what appears to be the results of interviews through the years. Raised in the same location as the Families, he knew them personally and by reputation. This is what makes the story. He knows what he is talking about and has a wonderful flow between the transcripts and the “normal” lives of the people referred to. He gives us perhaps the most accurate picture of the history from the 1950s to the present of the “families” including their movement from Brooklyn to Staten Island, and on into the final crumbling days of the Dons. I was pleasantly surprised by this book, I thought it would be a lot of blood and guts described in great detail and do not usually read books to do with the Mafia. This book is so unexpected, I’m inclined to read Breslin’s other books on the same topics. I would recommend this book for it’s courtroom interest, it’s historical fact, and it’s entertainment value. Very good.